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Biography

Long before
Houston became a must-see destination for A&R executives
and trend sniffling tastemakers eagerly scoping out the
next big thing, the steamy southern fried city was HQ
for a cadre of hungry, determined soldiers.
Soldiers who were ready willing and damn sure more than
able to hold H-Town down and bring that city's syrupy
slow, crunk-rich vibe to whatever heads might be
fiending for the new.
Lil' Flip
ain't new to this. The pride of Houston, Texas aka
"The Freestyle King", has been bringing home-town,
homegrown hip-hop style and sonics to appreciative
audiences since the late 90's both as an underage
protege of the late legendary DJ Screw, and on his own
hugely successful CDs. Whether keeping it totally
underground on classic joints like 1999's, The
Leprechaun or unleashing his trademark flow on
chart-topping releases such as Underground Legend (2002)
or U Gotta Feel Me (2004), Lil' Flip has grown from
being a regional contender to an A-list heavyweight
champ. "People think that when you get that
crossover success you forget where you came from." Flip
explains. "But now that I have more fans I'm gonna
keep bringing what they came to me for in the first
place. I can't forget where I'm from and what
brought to me where I am now."
The dedication
is evident on Lil' Flip's third Sony Urban Music effort,
I Need Mine. Filled with club bangers and street
anthems and featuring production from some of the
hottest names in hip-hop, for example, Scott Storch,
Sandy Lal, Mannie Fresh and others. I Need Mine is
the album Flip's fans have been waiting for. It is
also the eagerly anticipating follow-up to the explosive
U Gotta Feel Me, which boasted the hits "Game Over" and
"Sunshine", the videos for which owned the #1 spot on
BET's "106 And Park". Like Underground Legend, U
Gotta Feel Me went platinum, generating over 2 million
ringtone sales and soldifying Flip's position as one of
hip-hop's most versatile artists in the process.
Like U Gotta Feel Me, I Need Mine is executive produced
by Lil' Flip's advisor and manager, Sandy Sal for the
King Pin Entertainment Group.
Versatility
and an ability to fuse underground grit with mainstream
accessibility fuels I Need Mine and everything Lil' Flip
touches. As befitting a guy who literally built
his career from the ground floor up. Flip's been
keeping busy, making moves, tracks and deals. He
recently sealed a joint venture deal with New Orleans's
rappers Sqad-Up on Flip's Clover G Records. The
result of that partnership is Sqad-Up's debut "Beatin'
Up The Block", which is taking radio by storm.
Another fired up collaboration is "Turn It Up", the
first single from Flip's fellow Texan, Chamillionaire.
The pumped up hit is rising up the charts and the Gil
Green-directed video is already a staple at video
outlets. Equally hot is one of the I Need Mine's
single "You'z A Trick", which has racked up sales of 15
thousand ringtones in a mere two weeks. Along with
his musical output Lil' Flip, along with Sandy Lal,
recently launched his own beverage line, Lucky Nites.
"I've got a lot of interests in a lot of different
areas" Flip says speaking to his multi-faceted macking.
"I wanna give the fans Lil' Flip in a whole bunch of
different ways and also challenge myself."
Such a desire
to exceed any limitations and constantly push the
envelope is at the root of Lil' Flip's astounding climb
to the top.
Born Wesley
Weston in Houston's Cloverland neighborhood, Flip was a
teen when he grabbed the attention of the groundbreaking
Houston hip-hop genius DJ Screw, architect of a unique
style of mixing, cutting and scratching. Impressed
with young Flip's prowess. Screw (who died of a
heart attack in 2000) initiated Flip into his elite and
loosely knit Screwed Up Click posse.
Before long,
the kid with the nimble rhyme style became a local star,
flexing his freestyle muscle on a pair of Screw's most
popular mix tapes. Flip's off the dome rhyme
skills earned him the nickname "The Freestyle King".
That's when things really took off. In 1998 Flip
released Hustlaz Stackin' Ends on Sucka Free Records.
Driven purely by word of mouth, the CD further
established Flip in the fiercely competitive Texas,
greater South market place. Flip proved lightening
can strike twice with The Leprechaun which on the
strength of the runaway hit "I Can Do Dat" SoundScanned
an astonishing 100,000 units. Eager to top that
success, Flip laced fans with 10 consecutive volumes of
underground "Screwed & Chopped" mix tapes, each claiming
average sales of 30,000.
Not
surprisingly the big noise coming from down south caught
the ears of the industry. Flip and Sucka Free
became the subjects of an intense biddin war, which was
won by Sony Records in 2002. The transition from indie
to major was seamless. Underground Legend, driven
by the sing-along smash "The Way We Ball" entered the
Billboard 200 at #12, the Hip-Hop/R&B charts at #4 and
sold more than a million copies. Along with promoting
his double CD, Flip took time to throw down with
friends. In 2003, Flip appeared on David Banner's
"Like A Pimp", which was nominated for Best Rap
Collaboration at the 2003 Source Awards and Coolest
Collaboration at the Vibe Music Awards. Flip also
cameoed on Three 6 Mafia's "Ridin' Spinners", Fam-Lay's
"Rock And Roll (Remix)".
Flip again
raised ithe bar with U Gotta Feel Me which took the
hip-hop nation by storm with its mix of sexy shout outs
and crunk-blessed manifestos, all of which set the stage
for I Need Mine which will be released by Asylum Records
in late 2006.
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